Wednesday, April 19, 2023

Opinion: Did the U.S. financial crisis make the Bank of Canada’s job easier?
DOING HIS CHURCH LADY IMITATION 















Bank of Canada Governor Tiff Macklem takes part in a news conference after announcing an interest rate decision in Ottawa.

Opinion Special to Financial Post • 
By Steve Ambler and Jeremy Kronick

Last week, the Bank of Canada held its overnight rate, its benchmark policy rate, at 4.5 per cent . No surprises there. In its last announcement, the bank told us the data were consistent with their view that, with the target rate where it is, inflation would come back down to three per cent by the middle of this year. Data since have not changed governing council’s view that at present more tightening wasn’t necessary.

In fact, if anything, the major economic development over the last six weeks, the failures of Silicon Valley Bank (SVB) and Signature Bank , as well as the emergency takeover of Credit Suisse by UBS Group AG , made caution even more prudent. Furthermore, it might actually make the Bank of Canada’s fight against inflation easier.

The U.S. crisis resulted from poor banking risk management, in particular poor interest rate management, and a failure of supervision. SVB was the banker to the tech sector and the venture capitalists that supported them. In the years leading up to the crisis, the institution received a massive influx of deposits, many of which, because of their sheer size, were uninsured, and thus, a flight risk.

This made it hard for SVB to find a home for all the deposits, and so they invested heavily in long-term bonds when interest rates were very low. The Federal Reserve’s rate hikes caused a paper loss on SVB’s holdings of long-term bonds. When interest rates go up, bond values fall. When depositors realized this and attempted to withdraw their funds, SVB was forced to sell assets to honour the withdrawals, and the paper losses became real. A liquidity problem turned into insolvency. Signature Bank failed shortly after, and systemically important Credit Suisse was taken over by its former competitor, UBS.

The root cause of this banking crisis is the fact that central banks all over the world have been raising interest rates in order to cool off inflation. But, therein lies the rub: what to do if you must continue fighting entrenched inflation but at the risk of increased financial instability?

The Fed’s March interest rate announcement (two weeks after the banking crisis began) insisted that there were no issues with the “sound and resilient” U.S. banking system. And, despite pleas in some corners to pause the rate hikes in light of SVB’s collapse, the Fed plowed ahead with a 25-basis-point hike on March 21. However, pundits and markets have revised downwards their expectations of how high the Fed’s policy rate will ultimately go.

What does this all mean for the Bank of Canada?


First, that it deserves credit for being the first central bank to begin the monetary policy tightening process, which has allowed them to get inflation down faster than other countries and means they have minimized the potential trade-off with financial stability should there be spillovers here at home from the banking crisis abroad.

Second, the fight against inflation might be easier as a result of this crisis. Less tightening by the Fed means less of a differential between U.S. rates and Canadian rates. A larger differential would have put downward pressure on the Canadian dollar, increasing import prices and putting upward pressure on inflation. The bank’s inflation fighting strategy involves tempering increases in demand, and a lower Canadian dollar would work against this by boosting the demand for Canada’s exports.

Moreover, as credit conditions tighten globally because of the bank collapses, borrowing becomes more difficult, including in Canada, which will reduce domestic aggregate demand.

There are other encouraging signs for global inflation. Headline inflation is decreasing in most major economies, helped partly by lower energy prices. It is still generally higher than Canada’s headline inflation, although in the U.S., March headline inflation (announced just before the Bank of Canada’s announcement) dropped to five per cent, a full percentage point lower than the previous month. The International Monetary Fund has also revised down its estimates for world economic growth, which will help to calm inflation globally.

We’re not out of the woods, but we are beginning to see more light through the trees. If Canadian inflation continues to abate with an overnight rate target of 4.5 per cent, the bank may succeed in slaying inflation while not throwing the economy into recession. Strange to say, but SVB’s collapse might have made that outcome more likely.

Steve Ambler is professor of economics, Université du Québec à Montréal and David Dodge Chair in Monetary Policy at the C.D. Howe Institute, where Jeremy Kronick is Director, Monetary and Financial Services Research.

'Canada's a paragon of safe banking': Why Canada has had no bank failures since 2001, while the U.S. has had hundreds

Story by MoneyWise • Monday‎


 Provided by MoneyWise Canada

The collapse of U.S. banks like Silicon Valley Bank might have you asking: what happens if a Canadian bank fails? Luckily, the way Canadian banks are set up means the chance of failure is very, very low.

“Since 2001, America has had 562 bank failures,” said Mathie Labrèche, director, media strategy and communications with the Canadian Bankers Association. “In Canada, that number’s zero.”

Still, with high inflation, fears of a recession — and our tight economic ties with our southern neighbours — you might be feeling a little anxious.

To help assuage any fears you may have, we spoke to Labrèche and Alex Ciappara, director, credit market and economic policy with CBA, to find out how safe your money is in Canadian banks.


Canadian banks feel the stress

Unlike the U.S., all banks in Canada must pass stress tests, regardless of their size.

The stress tests expose banks to “exceptional but plausible” circumstances. The conditions of the test help to identify risk. For instance, the stress test will see how a bank performs during economic slumps.

“Canada’s a paragon of safe banking,” said Labrèche.

He points to the banking crisis of 2008 and the pandemic as massive financial downturns that the Canadian banking system was able to not only withstand, but stay strong throughout.

“Banks are well managed, well regulated, well diversified and well capitalized,” said Ciappara.

Each of these elements plays a role in ensuring that Canadian banks are less likely to fail, meaning that your money is safer when deposited in a Canadian bank.

Canadian banks are well managed


Having a well-managed bank ensures that the daily operations — everything from loans to deposits — are safe and secure. Ciappara points to the nation’s mortgage delinquency rates to demonstrate a key difference between the U.S. and Canada.

Mortgage delinquency happens when a homeowner is at least 30 days behind on a mortgage payment. According to the CBA, the mortgage delinquency rate was 0.15 per cent nationally in 2022, compared to 1.77 per cent in Q4 in the U.S. In the U.S. the rate reached a high of 11.50 per cent following the Great Recession of 2008 to 2009. In Canada, we only reached 0.45 per cent in that same time period.

Canadian real estate debt totals ​$ ​2,267.8 billion ; which is still a lot of cash to lend out. However, the fact that there is such a low delinquency rate demonstrates how effective our banks are at managing that debt.

This ability to identify risk is one factor that keeps cash flow healthier, meaning the banks are in better financial health and are less likely to fail. Canada also has a more unified approach for insuring the money you deposit.

Canadian banks are well insured

When you deposit your money in a Canadian bank, you can rest assured that it’ll be there when you go to take it out.

That’s because the Canada Deposit Insurance Corporation (CDIC) will insure up to $100,000 per account, per institution.

The CDIC is a Crown corporation that provides insurance for bank deposits, and protects account holders in the event of a bank failure.

You could have $100,000 deposited in an account under your name at one bank, and another $100,000 deposited at another. Both deposits would be insured by the CDIC. Even if the bank should fail, your money would still be available to you.

Ciappara points out that there are different categories that CDIC insurance applies to and each has $100,000 of coverage. The insured categories are:
Deposits held in your name (e.g. chequing account)
Deposits held in the name of two or more people (e.g. joint accounts)
Deposits held in trust. (Up to $100,000 per beneficiary named in a trust)
Deposits held in a registered retirement savings plan (RRSP)
Deposits held in a Registered Education Savings Plan (RESP)
Deposits held in a registered retirement income fund (RRIF)
Deposits held in a tax-free savings account (TFSA)
Deposits held in a first home savings account (FHSA)
Deposits held in a Registered Disability Savings Plan (RDSP)

Just like the banks diversify where their money is invested, you should follow the same process.

Spreading out your investments in a variety of funds minimizes the risk of any investments failing. And if you put your money in one of the areas protected by CDIC insurance, you have the added benefit of knowing that you have extra protection should a bank failure occur.

Canadian banks are well regulated

In Canada, the Office of the Superintendent of Financial Institutions (OSFI) ensures that banks are not likely to have massive failures.

While the OSFI is the single prudential regulatory office in Canada — that is, the office that supervises, regulates and monitors financial institutions — there are various regulators in the U.S.

Ciappara believes a single regulator ensures greater security, since there is “a clear line of communication between the regulator and the banking system.” Basically, there is a single third-party entity in place to ensure that the bank is operating with the best practices.

When you have one organization ensuring that everything is operating smoothly, you know that a certain standard is being met. When you have many regulators overseeing things, there’s no clear regulatory system, increasing the chances of failure. In Canada, there is less chance of any major upheavals that will affect your assets.

Canadian banks are well diversified


You might have noticed that the U.S. has more smaller, regional banks than we have in Canada.

The sheer number of smaller banks operating makes it more difficult to diversify their credit risk, revenues and funding.

As Ciappara points out, “as goes the economic fortunes of a town, so do the results of the bank.”

Having national banks ensures their strength isn’t tied to a single, regional economy. This means that even if one type of industry faces hardship, the wide range of customers and services will keep the establishment going.

Canadian banks are well capitalized

The next time you borrow money from your bank, know that you’re helping the security of our financial institutions.

Ciappara says that Canadian banks maintain strong capital, in part thanks to their ability to earn income on the loans they distribute. There is a healthy cash flow, which reduces the chance of failure.

In the case of Silicon Valley Bank, one cause of the failure was customers rushing to withdraw their funds. The ability to maintain strong capital ties into our banks being well diversified and demonstrating ”solid credit risk management practices.” At the end of the day, there’s less risk of you being affected by other account holders withdrawing their funds.

This article provides information only and should not be construed as advice. It is provided without warranty of any kind.
GOOD NEWS FOR PEACE
U.S. report claims Trudeau told NATO Canada will never meet its military spending target

Story by Alexander Panetta • Today

A massive leak of U.S. national security documents has now spilled over into Canada.

The Washington Post says it has seen a Pentagon document criticizing Canada's military readiness among materials allegedly posted online by a Massachusetts Air National Guardsman arrested last week.

The purported document makes two broad claims.

First, it says that Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has told NATO officials privately that Canada will never reach the military spending target agreed to by members of the alliance.

Second, the document claims wide-ranging deficiencies in Canada's military capabilities are a source of tension with allies and defence partners.

"Widespread defence shortfalls hinder Canadian capabilities," the document says, according to the Post. "[Meanwhile it is] straining partner relationships and alliance contributions."

The Post says the document bears the seal of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff, suggesting it was produced for the senior leadership of the U.S. Department of Defense.

The document reportedly cites multiple points of tension between Canada and its NATO allies. Germany reportedly is concerned about whether Canada can keep helping Ukraine while meeting its NATO pledges.

Other NATO countries, according to the Post's report, have complained that Canada has not made good on a promise to increase its presence in Latvia, while the U.S. is seeking a faster modernization of Arctic defence technology.

Turkey reportedly is disappointed in Canada's refusal to assist in transporting humanitarian aid after February's deadly earthquake, while Haiti's government is frustrated by Canada's reluctance to lead a multilateral security mission there.

Asked about the report Wednesday, Trudeau defended Canada's defence spending, which is growing significantly.


Getting Canada to spend more on its military, and faster, was a key agenda topic last month when U.S. President Joe Biden visited Ottawa.© Sean Kilpatrick/The Canadian Press

Planned increases will see Canada's defence spending grow by $15 billion, or 40 per cent, within several years. Ottawa also has promised to buy F-35 fighter jets and modernize NORAD.

"I continue to say, and will always say, that Canada is a reliable partner to NATO, [a] reliable partner around the world," Trudeau told reporters while entering the daily question period.

Fewer than half of NATO members have reached the alliance's agreed-upon target of spending two per cent of their GDP on defence.

Canada ranks among the lowest spenders within NATO as a share of national GDP. In terms of actual dollars spent, it ranks among the highest.

Trudeau has been non-committal when asked about reaching that two per cent target. In private, the Post says — quoting from the document — Trudeau has "told NATO officials that Canada will never reach 2 per cent defence spending."

In a media statement, a spokesperson for Defence Minister Anita Anand said Canada has "the sixth-largest defence budget among the Alliance's members."

"Our commitment to Euro-Atlantic and global security is ironclad and we continue to make landmark investments to equip our Armed Forces," said Daniel Minden, citing the planned purchase of F-35s, the modernization of NORAD, efforts to expand the Canadian-led NATO battle group in Latvia to brigade level and Canada's aid contributions to Ukraine.

"Canada will continue to grow its military capacity to meet the challenges of today's world," he added. "Overall, Canada's defence policy increases our defence spending by over 70 per cent between 2017 and 2026. We also announced $8 billion in additional defence spending in Budget 2022."
Ericsson and federal government invest in research, new jobs, at provider’s Montreal and Ottawa facilities

Story by MobileSyrup • Monday

The Government of Canada and Ericsson have entered a five-year partnership focusing on research and development.


Provided by MobileSyrup

The investment is valued at $470 million and will help Ericsson create jobs that center on 5G Advanced, 6G, AI, Cloud RAN, and Core Network technologies.

Funding will go towards the Ottawa and Montreal facilities, which will also help expand the Montreal-based Quantum Research hub.

Related video: Gradual recovery expected in second half of 2023, Ericsson CEO says (CNBC)
Duration 2:41  View on Watch

“We are already seeing the benefits of next-generation technologies such as 5G and AI, yet we are still in the early days of their potential to transform our work, leisure, and social lives,” Börje Ekholm, Ericsson’s president and CEO, said.

“Ericsson’s R&D investment partnership with the Canadian government, supported by world-class talent in Ottawa and Montreal, will boost innovation and ultimately help to improve the lives of millions of people.”

Islamophobia widespread in Canada, early findings of Senate committee study indicate

Story by The Canadian Press • 6h ago

TORONTO — Islamophobia and violence against Muslims is widespread and deeply entrenched in Canadian society, early findings from a Senate committee studying the issue indicate.

Sen. Salma Ataullahjan

Muslim women who wear hijabs – Black Muslim women in particular – are the most vulnerable, and confronting Islamophobia in a variety of public spheres is difficult, the committee on human rights has found.

"Canada has a problem," committee chair Sen. Salma Ataullahjan said in a phone interview with The Canadian Press.

"We are hearing of intergenerational trauma because young kids are witnessing this. Muslims are speaking out because there's so many attacks happening and they're so violent."

The problem is worse than current statistics suggest, Ataullahjan said.

Many Muslims across Canada live with constant fear of being targeted, especially if they have experienced an Islamophobic attack, witnessed one or lost a loved one to violence, the committee found.

"Some of these women were afraid to leave their homes and it became difficult for them to take their children to school. Many were spat on," Ataullahjan said. " Muslims have to look over their shoulder constantly."

Last month, figures released by Statistics Canada indicated police-reported hate crimes targeting Muslims increased by 71 per cent from 2020 to 2021. The rate of the crimes was eight incidents per 100,000 members of the Muslim population, based on census figures.

The Senate committee's work began in June 2021, not long after four members of a Muslim family died after being run over by a pickup truck while out for an evening walk in London, Ont. A man is facing terror-related murder charges in their deaths.

The committee's senators, analysts, translators and other staff travelled to Vancouver, Edmonton, Quebec, and across the Greater Toronto Area to speak with Canadians who attend mosques, Muslims who were victims of attacks, teachers, doctors and security officials, among others.

The findings from those conversations are now being put together in a report, which the committee began drafting this week, Ataullahjan said.

Related video: Mosque members call for action after attack (cbc.ca)
Duration 2:02 View on Watch

The final version of the report – set to be published in July – is expected to include recommendations on what can be done to combat Islamophobia and how government can better support victims of attacks, she said.

Among the committee's findings is an observation that attacks against Muslims often appear to happen out on the streets and appear to be more violent than those targeting other religious groups, Ataullahjan said.

Analysts and experts interviewed by the Senate committee said the rise of far-right hate groups and anti-Muslim groups are among the factors driving attacks against Muslims, Ataullahjan said.

The committee looked at the cases of Black Muslim women in Edmonton who were violently assaulted in recent years.

"Some of them sat in front of us and everyone was getting teary-eyed because it's not easy to tell your story especially where you've been hurt," she said.

The 2017 shooting at a Quebec mosque when a gunman opened fire, killing six worshippers and injuring several others, is another example of violent Islamophobia, she said.

The Senate committee's report will also address recent violence against Muslims, including an alleged assault outside a Markham, Ont., mosque where witnesses told police a man tore up a Qur'an, yelled racial slurs, and tried to ram a car into congregants.

The committee will also detail day-to-day aggression against Muslim Canadians, including accounts from hijab-wearing girls in schools who don't feel comfortable reporting instances of Islamophobia to police, Ataullahjan said.

The National Council of Canadian Muslims said the initial findings align with what it has been observing and trying to inform government leaders about for years.

"We're happy that this is being done," said spokesman Steven Zhou. "It's something that everyone everywhere needs to study up on. It's a worsening problem."

The council gets calls every day from Muslims across Canada detailing instances of Islamophobia, Zhou said, underscoring the need for action.

"People don't like to report these things," he said. "It takes a lot out of them to actually go to courts or talk to the police who might not understand exactly what they've gone through."

Zhou said he expects the committee will make recommendations similar to suggestions the council has already put forward, including changes to hate crime legislation, creating policies that would prevent hate groups from gathering near places of worship, and legislation to deal with online hate.

The National Council of Muslim Canadians also hopes the report will help Canadians familiarize themselves with the Muslim community.

"We want to address hate," he said. "But also it's about building bridges. For people to learn about Islam, for people to learn about what this religion is actually about, how the community works."

This report by The Canadian Press was first published April 19, 2023.

Fakiha Baig, The Canadian Press
Review: 'Pathogenesis' offers different lens on history

Story by The Canadian Press • Yesterday

“Pathogenesis: A History of the World in Eight Plagues,” by Jonathan Kennedy (Crown)


Great historical changes are often conceived of as being brought about by the genius and tenacity of great men, or occasionally women, but Jonathan Kennedy argues in his book “Pathogenesis: A History of the World in Eight Plagues,” that germs are largely responsible for everything from the decline of the Neanderthals to the current poverty of sub-Saharan Africa.

His quick history of the world from the Paleolithic to the present day offers a different lens to view many of the big events of the past. Some of Kennedy's conclusions are mere speculation, like his idea that deadly plagues in the Roman empire led to the swift rise of Christianity. In the midst of so much death, he argues, the new religion offered a more enticing view of the afterlife than paganism.

Most of his observations are bolstered by more historical research and are more convincing. In showing how pathogens helped the Spanish conquer Central and South America, Kennedy explains that European diseases including smallpox and measles killed or incapacitated most of the native population, which had no immunity to the previously unknown germs. One outbreak in 1545 alone is estimated to have killed up to 80% of the Indigenous peoples of Mesoamerica.

The death and destruction also accelerated their religious conversion as many of the remaining Indigenous peoples, along with the Spanish, saw it as proof that the Christian God was superior, Kennedy argues.

On the other side of the Atlantic, Kennedy explains how resistance to infectious disease — especially the malaria and yellow fever prevalent in parts of sub-Saharan Africa — boosted the slave trade. Disease-resistant Africans were less likely to die on the new world plantations than Europeans, and much of the native population had already been wiped out. The subsequent association of Africans with slavery contributed to the ideology of white supremacy that continues to impact the way African Americans are treated today, Kennedy argues.

The presence of malaria and yellow fever also prevented Europeans from colonizing the African interior, but only for a time. That changed when quinine was discovered to help prevent death from malaria. But because the rates of death and disease were still high, the colonies attracted desperate and ruthless individuals with a desire to make a quick fortune and get out. It was disease, Kennedy argues, that helped create the harshly extractive colonial economies in places like the Congo, the repercussions of which are still felt in the extreme poverty of those countries.

Poverty, including in wealthy countries like the United States, is a sort of modern plague, killing millions each year with both infectious disease and non-communicable diseases like diabetes, Kennedy argues in the final chapter. These poverty-associated health problems, in turn, have been associated with higher death rates during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Kennedy ends with a passionate plea for public health expenditures to eliminate disease. Relying on examples of successful public health campaigns throughout the book, he argues that such an investment will both improve human lives and bolster economies.

Travis Loller, The Associated Press
Iowa Republicans voted just before 5 a.m. to roll back child labor laws, letting teens work on packaging lines and serve alcohol

"Every parent wants their kids to grow up with every opportunity to succeed, not risk an early death by working in dangerous jobs, the legislation passed by the Senate tonight is every parent's worst nightmare."

Story by rcohen@insider.com (Rebecca Cohen) • Yesterday 

The Iowa bill would allow teens to work longer hours, take jobs on assembly lines, and serve alcohol.
Luis Alvarez/Getty Images© Luis Alvarez/Getty Images

The Iowa Senate voted just before 5 a.m. to pass a bill that would roll back child labor laws.

The bill, if passed by the House, would allow teens to work longer hours and serve alcohol.

A state labor leader told Insider he thought the bill's early-morning passage was a "disgrace."


Iowa's Republican-led state senate voted in an early-morning session to roll back child labor laws in the state — allowing teens to work longer hours and to serve alcohol at their jobs.

The bill passed 32-17 before 5 a.m. local time on Tuesday with two Republicans — Sens. Charlie McClintock and Jeff Taylor — joining the entire Democratic party in opposition of the bill.

The bill would allow sixteen and seventeen-year-olds to work until 9:00 p.m. during the school year and until 11:00 p.m. over the summer. It also allows same-aged kids to serve alcohol in restaurants if their parents sign off on it.

The bill prohibits fourteen and fifteen-year-olds from any mining or manufacturing work but adds that anyone under the age of eighteen can do "light" assembly line or packaging work — as long as machines aren't involved.

The voting session had dragged into the early morning because supporter GOP Sen. Adrian Dickey refused to answer a question from Democrats about amendments to the bill, the Des Moines Register reported.

The bill now goes to the House of Representatives for a vote.

A slew of Democrats and labor leaders in the state have spoken out against the bill, noting that it could create unsafe work environments for kids.

According to the Register, Democrats had tried to include additional amendments to the bill to offer additional workers' compensation benefits to any teens that got injured on the job.


Related video: Iowa Senate passes child labor bill in very early morning session (WHO-TV Des Moines) Duration 1:57  View on Watch


Charlie Wishman, the President of the Iowa Federation of Labor AFL-CIO, told Insider in a statement he thought the passing of the bill is a "disgrace," adding that it will "do nothing to attract new Iowans, and puts children at risk of death in dangerous occupations."

"Every parent wants their kids to grow up with every opportunity to succeed, not risk an early death by working in dangerous jobs," Wishman said. "The legislation passed by the Senate tonight is every parent's worst nightmare."

He added that "the majority party's inability and unwillingness to answer any questions about this legislation disenfranchises Iowans from the political process and takes away their elected representatives' ability to get them answers."

"If the Iowa Senate wishes to operate in this fashion, democracy dies in our state," Wishman told Insider.

Iowa Senate Democratic Leader Zach Wahls in a statement to Insider called the bill "dangerous" that "will allow Iowa kids to serve alcohol, work in roofing and demolition, and inside industrial freezers – and they passed it in the dead of the night when they thought they could dodge democratic accountability."

He continued: "If this legislation becomes law, Iowa kids will be exposed to dangerous working conditions that violate federal law and threaten their health and wellbeing. This bill is immoral, illogical, and it will lead to more kids getting injured and killed in workplace accidents. While Iowa is facing a workforce crisis, Senate Republicans shouldn't try to solve it on the backs of children."

Gov. Kim Reynolds has previously spoken in favor of the bill, telling reporters this month she doesn't think "we should discourage" kids wanting to work and to earn money, the Des Moines Register reported.

At an April 4 press event, Reynolds, speaking about the bill, pointed to her own experience working as a teen babysitting and waiting tables, according to the Register.

"That's good experience," Reynolds said. "You know, it teaches the kids a lot and if they have the time to do it and they want to earn some additional money I don't think we should discourage that."

Reynolds did not immediately respond to Insider's request for comment.

Other supporters of the bill, including Dickey, have argued that the bill will teach Iowa's children important skills in workforce training programs, the Register reported.

"While the responsibility of having a job might be more valuable than having a paycheck, the reward of the paycheck will allow these youth who want to have a job to possibly save for a car, maybe buy a prom dress, go to a summer camp, take a date out for the weekend," Dickey said, according to the Register.

In addition to rolling back child labor laws, Republicans in the state have voted to restrict SNAP food benefits.

This month, legislators passed a bill that adds hurdles for those wanting food assistance, including banning anyone with more than $15,000 in liquid assets or savings from getting benefits and requiring state agencies to run identification checks on beneficiaries.

An earlier version of the bill banned people on the food assistance program from buying staples like white bread or American cheese, but that was stripped from the final bill.
BC
Fairy Creek old-growth protesters celebrate as contempt prosecution has 'collapsed'

Story by The Canadian Press • Yesterday 

VANCOUVER — The B.C. Prosecution Service says it has withdrawn contempt charges against 11 old-growth logging protesters accused of breaching a court injunction during blockades at Fairy Creek on Vancouver Island.


Fairy Creek old-growth protesters celebrate as contempt prosecution has 'collapsed'© Provided by The Canadian Press

Spokesman Gordon Comer says prosecutors were in court Tuesday to enter the withdrawals, and the service is reviewing other cases in the wake of a ruling that acquitted protester Ryan Henderson earlier this year.

Comer says the Crown is reviewing remaining cases that were impacted by the Henderson decision, which tossed out the charge because of the RCMP's failure to properly read the injunction to people arrested during the protest.

A lawyer defending protesters says the Crown is expected to withdraw charges against as many as 150 people because police used a short-form script to inform people of the injunction instead of reading the whole thing to those accused of breaching it.

B.C. Civil Liberties Association president Karen Mirsky, who has several clients facing contempt charges for protests at Fairy Creek, says police didn't follow long-standing legal principles when they failed to read the full injunction.

Mirsky says the RCMP spent millions of dollars during the protests on Vancouver Island and the force's failure to properly enforce the injunction highlights how provinces should re-think the kinds of policing they're getting for their public dollars.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published April 18, 2023.

The Canadian Press
Inflation drops below 5% for the first time in more than a year: What that means to Canadians

Story by Kevin Carmichael • Yesterday 

Statistics Canada's consumer price index increased 4.3 per cent from March 2022, the smallest year-over-year increase since August 2021.© Provided by Financial Post

Canada’s primary gauge of cost pressures suggests inflation dropped to its slowest pace since the summer of 2021 in March, reducing the odds of more interest rate increases, at least for now. Here’s what you need to know:

Statistics Canada’s consumer price index increased 4.3 per cent from March 2022, the smallest year-over-year increase since August 2021.

Excluding food and energy, the year-over-year increase was 4.5 per cent, down from 4.8 per cent in February. Excluding mortgage interest costs, the index increased 3.6 per cent, compared with 4.7 per cent the previous month.

On the month, the consumer price index rose 0.5 per cent from February, compared with a month-to-month gain of 0.4 per cent in February.

The two measures of “core” inflation that the Bank of Canada watches to avoid being distracted by volatile prices, CPI-median and CPI-trim, slowed to 4.6 per cent and 4.4 per cent respectively.

The speed of price increases has slowed, but the cost of living remains elevated, as the consumer price index was 8.7 per cent higher in March than 18 months earlier.

Backstory


Year-over-year increases in the CPI surged to 8.1 per cent in June 2022, representing the peak of the worst inflation scare since the early 1980s. The Bank of Canada — like every other central bank — was initially complacent, assuming the cost pressures were the result of idiosyncratic events such as post-pandemic supply-chain snarls and Russia’s war in Ukraine. But the central bank eventually realized that a significant amount of the cost pressure was also coming from domestic demand.

Governor Tiff Macklem raised the benchmark interest rate 4.25 percentage points between March 2022 and January 2023, the most aggressive series of rate hikes in the Bank of Canada’s history. Now that headline inflation is quickly slowing, the central bank has decided to pause, but Macklem last week warned that increases could resume because he’s worried inflation could still get stuck above the central bank’s two-per-cent target.

What’s driving the decrease


Simple math explains much of the slowing of inflation. By convention, year-over-year changes in the CPI — a compilation of the costs of obtaining hundreds of goods and services — is the standard way of defining inflation. A year ago, amid the worst outbreak of inflation in four decades, the index surged higher. Now, Statistics Canada is comparing current prices against that elevated base. The index jumped an outsized 1.4 per cent in March 2022 from the previous month. Prices are no longer increasing at such a pace, so the headline number is falling.

Life is still expensive


Headline inflation closer to four per cent than eight per cent is a relief, but it might not feel like it for a lot of households. The Bank of Canada’s interest rates increases are biting harder: mortgage interest costs increased 26.4 per cent from March 2022, an acceleration from 23.9 per cent in February and the biggest increase on record, Statistics Canada said.

The cost of food purchased at stores slowed, but was nonetheless 9.7 per cent higher than in March 2022.

Gasoline costs were offsetting some of the pain from food and shelter, as prices dropped 13.8 per cent from a year earlier, when the war in Ukraine had caused oil prices to skyrocket essentially overnight.

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Core of the matter


Inflation data often are messy because the headline number is influenced to an outsized degree by items such as gasoline and fresh fruit, costs of which are influenced by the vagaries of international markets and the weather. So, the Bank of Canada and economists manipulate the CPI to reduce the influence of volatile items by creating “core” measures that aim to detect “underlying” inflation, or what might otherwise be described as the trend.

The Bank of Canada’s two preferred measures of core inflation slowed to about 4.5 per cent from about 4.9 per cent in February. The improvement is notable, but those figures imply that trend inflation is still elevated.

Headline inflation slowed to about 2.1 per cent when calculated as a three-month annualized rate, according to Charles St-Arnaud, chief economist at Alberta Central. That aligns with the Bank of Canada’s target of two per cent. However, the three-month average of the CPI when food and energy are removed was about 3.1 per cent, still outside the central bank’s comfort zone of one per cent to three per cent.

Macklem is paying particular attention to services prices since they are more influenced by domestic demand than the prices for goods. The services’ component of the consumer price index increased 5.1 per cent from March 2021, compared with a 5.3 per cent year-over-year increase in February.

What it means for interest rates


The Bank of Canada last week predicted that headline inflation will average 3.3 per cent in the current quarter and the sharp drop to 4.3 per cent means that projection remains on track. More important will be where we go from here: will a lower headline rate cause expectations of where prices are headed to drop, or will businesses and workers continue to base decisions on where inflation has been? More increases remain on the table.

Inflation hits lowest level since August 2021, but BoC not expected to back off yet

Story by The Canadian Press • Yesterday 

OTTAWA — The Bank of Canada is expected to keep interest rates elevated for some time even as the country's annual inflation rate falls rapidly.


Inflation hits lowest level since August 2021, but BoC not expected to back off yet© Provided by The Canadian Press

Inflation in Canada dropped to 4.3 per cent in March, Statistics Canada said in its latest consumer price index report released Tuesday.

The headline rate eased from 5.2 per cent in February as higher mortgage interest costs were offset by lower energy prices.

The country's annual inflation rate is mostly tracking along the Bank of Canada's forecast of reaching three per cent by mid-year. Its preferred measures of core inflation, which the central bank uses to look through volatility in prices, also trended downward in March.

"Today's report shows that all roads do indeed point to three per cent inflation in the months ahead," said BMO chief economist Douglas Porter in a client note.

The continued slowdown in inflation since last summer has now brought the annual rate down to the lowest it’s been since August 2021.

But the Bank of Canada has said it won’t rest until inflation gets back to its two per cent target, even if the deceleration in inflation has been encouraging. That means expect interest rates to stay high for the next while.

While testifying at the House of Commons finance committee on Tuesday, governor Tiff Macklem acknowledged that the latest CPI report shows inflation is heading in the right direction.

"We are encouraged by that, but we are also seized with the importance of staying the course and restoring price stability for Canadians," Macklem told MPs.

The central bank is particularly concerned that getting from three to two per cent might take a while. According to its latest forecasts, the Bank of Canada is expecting inflation to return to its two per cent target by the end of 2024.

The central bank's concern about sticky inflation largely stems from persistently high wage growth and service price inflation.

In March, service prices were up 5.1 per cent from a year ago. Meanwhile, wages were 5.3 per cent higher than a year ago, growing at a faster pace than inflation.

In a client note on Tuesday, TD managing director and senior economist Leslie Preston said the latest data speaks to the challenges Macklem has highlighted.

"The Bank of Canada needs to remain vigilant to inflation pressures, and may need to hike again if momentum in the domestic economy does not cool as expected," Preston said.

At its last interest rate decision on April 12, Macklem addressed speculation that the central bank would move to cut rates toward the end of the year. He said that didn't look like "the most likely scenario."

Instead, the central bank has signalled interest rates may have to stay higher for longer to get there. Its key interest rate currently sits at 4.5 per cent, the highest it's been since 2007.

In the months to come, the headline rate is expected to continue to fall rapidly in part due to base-year effects. A base-year effect refers to the impact of price movements from a year ago on the calculation of the year-over-year inflation rate.

Porter said base-year effects explains part of the deceleration last month, noting March 2022 saw the fastest monthly increase in prices in three decades.

But the deceleration hasn’t brought much relief to homeowners with new mortgages or renewing their mortgages at high interest rates. Mortgage interest costs rose at the fastest pace on record last month, up 26.4 per cent from a year ago.

Grocery prices are also still rising rapidly, but at a slower pace. Grocery prices were up 9.7 per cent on a year-over-year basis in March, down from 10.6 per cent in February. Statistics Canada said the deceleration was driven by lower prices for fruits and vegetables.

Economists have long been expecting slower price increases up the food supply chain to filter down to slower prices increases at grocery stores.

"I don't think we're gonna get a lot of relief from from high prices, they just won't be rising as quickly as what we've seen over the past year," Porter said.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published April 18, 2023.

Nojoud Al Mallees, The Canadian Press

Getting inflation below 3% won't be easy: Frances Donald

Story by Larysa Harapyn • Yesterday 


Frances Donald, chief economist at Manulife Investment Management, talks with Financial Posts Larysa Harapyn about how getting below three per cent inflation wont be easy.

ALBERTA 
Chronic wasting disease a growing threat, even to soil

Story by The Canadian Press • Yesterday 

In Alberta, Chronic Wasting Disease is present in mule deer, white-tailed deer, elk and moose. It’s a significant concern to wildlife managers and hunters in the province but, at this point, there is no solution to the problem. Data for the 2022-23 hunting season shows a province-wide contamination of 23.4%.

Joel Nicholson, senior wildlife biologist with Fish and Wildlife in Medicine Hat, said, “There are pockets of prevalence that are unbelievably high (in Saskatchewan). We are headed in the same direction. We’re pushing one in four from a mule deer standpoint. The prevalence only seems to go one direction without major intervention.”

The leading edges of the known distribution are being monitored, along the westward and northern spread. Since CWD was first confirmed in Alberta in 2005, the level of control, from aggressive to less so, has varied.

The head collection program is currently focusing on the leading edge of the disease as well, with the number of freezers provided decreasing. Online information (https://www.alberta.ca/chronic-wasting-disease-information-for-hunters.aspx) states that opportunities for submitting heads outside the target areas are limited.

“We did have freezers in the Medicine Hat area last year at a lower number,” stated Nicholson. “I don’t know what the status of the program will be this fall.”

While it is recommended that any animal infected with a prion disease, such as CWD, not be eaten, some are not concerned about it said Nicholson. CWD spreads by animal-to-animal contact and through bodily fluids. As it can take years to kill off an animal, there is significant opportunity for the disease to spread.

Debora Voll, who lives on an award-winning multigenerational farm in Saskatchewan, is concerned about soil contamination from CWD.

“I’m very passionate about this and I’m watching the devastation of the deer. We have 55% base of contamination or infection in mule deer. That is a risk to our soil and why I started my research. The more I research, the less I know. I think we need to drive home that soil contamination is a potential devastating outcome to the environment and the agriculture community. Not just for Saskatchewan but for Western Canada.”

Soil becomes contaminated with the CWD prion via saliva, urine and feces from infected animals.

“Studies show plants uptake the prion responsible for CWD. Tomatoes, corn, alfalfa, and wheat. Who is going to buy produce grown in potentially contaminated soil? That is not being addressed,” stated Voll.

A 2021 paper states the CWD prion can persist in a bioavailable state for years and certain soil microparticles enhance the transmissibility of the disease (https://veterinaryresearch.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s13567-021-00986-y). When deer consume soil, particularly in areas adjacent to mineral licks, they can ingest the CWD prion.

A plant sprayed with urine from an infected animal will also remain infectious for two years or more. The paper states that results regarding the uptake of prions by plants are not conclusive. One study showed grass plants do uptake prions from the soil and transport them to above ground vegetation and another showed wheat does not.

The first reported case of CWD was in 1967 and it is now confirmed in 30 states and four provinces, according to March 2023 information from the US Geological Survey. Norway’s first documented case was in 2016 with Finland and Sweden also reporting cases in wild Moose. The disease was shipped to Korea from Canada through imported deer in 1997. Given the impact on wildlife management, studies into CWD are ongoing.

SAMANTHA JOHNSON, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter, Medicine Hat News
ONTARIO
Health Coalition fighting privatization plans for health care

Story by The Canadian Press • Yesterday 

Ontario’s Conservative government is “pushing forward with plans to privatize the province’s public hospitals,” the Ontario Health Coalition said in a release, and the organization is fighting against that plan.

Tuesday, the local chapter of the Ontario Health Coalition hosts an information session in North Bay at the OPSEU hall 150 First Avenue, at 10 a.m.

“On January 16, the Ford government announced it is moving forward with plans to ‘substantially,’ in their own words, expand for-profit clinics and hospitals to take the surgeries and diagnostics out of our local public hospitals,” the coalition said.

“In response, thousands of Ontarians have taken to the streets of their communities to organize a mass citizen-run referendum.”

Related video: Health care workers rally for better pay and conditions with help from union (News 12)
Duration 2:08  View on Watch

The Ontario Health Coalition’s goal is to “improve our public health care system.” The coalition is a non-profit, non-partisan public interest activist coalition and network, as outlined in its mission and mandate statement.

Bill 60 – set to pass this week – will “have a detrimental effect,” on health services, said Henri Giroux, chair of the North Bay Health Coalition. The government has contracted the first three for-profit clinics in Windsor, Waterloo and Ottawa, “and is allowing for-profit corporations to run surgeries out of under-used public hospital operating rooms already,” the coalition detailed.

“The Health Coalition has vowed an unprecedented fightback to match the unprecedented privatization of Ontario’s core public health care services.”

David Briggs is a Local Journalism Initiative reporter who works out of BayToday, a publication of Village Media. The Local Journalism Initiative is funded by the Government of Canada.

David Briggs, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter, BayToday.ca